Twenty-third Day

'And I, brethren, could not speak onto yon as met* spiritual, but as unto carnal, as unto babes in Christ. T fett you with milk, not, with meat; for ye were not yet able *» jear it; nay, not even now are ye able; for whereas there is among you jealousy and strife, are ye not carnal, and walk after the manner of men 1'—1 Cob. iii. 1-8.

'If we live by the Spirit, by the Spirit let us also walk.'— Gal. T. 25.

IN" the previous chapter the Apostle had contrasted the believer as spiritual, with the unregenerate as the natural (or psychical) man: the man of the Spirit with the man of the soul (1 Cor. iL 14, 15). Here he supplements that teaching. He tells the Corinthians that, though they have the Spirit, he cu^not call them spiritual; that epithet belongs to those who have not only received the Spirit, but have yielded themselves to Him to possess and rule their whole life. Those who have not done this, in whom the power of the flesh is still more manifest than that of the Spirit, must be called not spiritual, but fleshly or carnal. There are thus three states in which a man may be found. The unregenerate is still the natural man, not having the Spirit of God. The regenerate, who is still a babe in Christ, whether because he is only lately converted, or because he has stood still and not advanced, is the carnal man, giving way to the power of the flesh. The believer in whom the Spirit has obtained full supremacy, is the spiritual man. The whole passage is suggestive of rich instruction' in regard to the life of the Spirit within us.

Tlie young Christian is still carnal. Regeneration is a birth: the centre and root of the personality, the spirit, has been renewed and taken possession of by the Spirit of God. But time is needed for its power from that centre to extend through all the circumference of our being. The kingdom of God is like unto a seed; the life in Christ is a growth; and it would be against the laws of nature and grace alike if we expected from the babe in Christ the strength that can only be found in the young men, or the rich experience of the fathers. Even where in the young convert there is great singleness of heart and faith, with true love and devotion to the Saviour, time is needed for a deeper knowledge of self and sin, for a spiritual insight into what God's will and grace are. With the young believer it is not unnatural that the emotions are deeply stirred, and that the mind delights in the contemplation of Divine truth; with the growth in grace, the will becomes the more important thing, and the

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waiting for the Spirit's power in the life and character more than the delight in those thoughts and images of the life which alone the mind could give. We need not wonder if the babe in Christ is still carnal.

Many Christians remain carnal, God has not only called us to grow, but has provided all the conditions and powers needful for growth. And yet it is sadly true, that there are many Christians who, like the Corinthians, remain babes in Christ when they ought to be going on to perfection, 'attaining unto a full-grown man.' In some eases the blame is almost more with the Church and its teaching, than with the individuals themselves. When the preaching makes salvation chiefly to consist in pardon and peace and the hope of heaven, or when, if a holy life be preached, the truth of Christ our Sanctification, our Sufficient Strength to be holy, and the Holy Spirit's indwelling, be not taught clearly and in the power of the Spirit, growth can hardly be expected. Ignorance, human and defective views of the gospel, as the power of God unto a present salvation in sanctification, are the cause of the evil.

In other cases the root of the evil is to be found in the unwillingness of the Christian to deny self and crucify the flesh. The call of Jesus to every disciple is,' If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself.' The Spirit is only given to the obedient; He can only do His work in those who are willing absolutely to give up self to the death. The sin that proved that the Corinthians were carnal was their jealousy and strife. When Christians are not willing to give up the sin of selfishness and temper; when, whether in the homerelationship or in the wider circle of church and public life, they want to retain the liberty of giving way to, or excusing evil feelings, of pronouncing their own judgments, and speaking words that are not in perfect love, then they remain carnal. "With all their knowledge, and their enjoyment of religious ordinances, and their work for God's kingdom, they are carnal and not spiritual. They grieve the Holy Spirit of God; they cannot have the testimony that they are pleasing to God.

The carnal Christian cannot apprehend spiritual truth. Paul writes to these Corinthians: ' I fed you with milk, and not with meat; for ye were not able to bear it; nay, not even now are ye able.' The Corinthians prided themselves on their wisdom; Paul thanked God that they were ' enriched in all knowledge.' There was nothing in His teaching that they would not have been able to comprehend with the understanding. But the real spiritual entering into the truth in power, so as to possess it and be possessed by it, so as to have not only the thoughts but the very thing the words speak of, this the Holy Spirit only can give. And He gives it only in the spiritually-minded man. The teaching and leading of the Spirit is given to the obedient, is preceded by the dominion of the Spirit in mortifying the deeds of the body (see Eom. viii 13 and 14). Spiritual knowledge is not deep thought but living contact, entering into and being united to the truth as it is in Jesus, a spiritual reality, a substantial existence. 'The Spirit teacheth, combining spiritual things with spiritual;' into a spiritual mind He works spiritual truth. It is not the power of intellect, it is not even the earnest desire to know the truth, that fits a man for the Spirit's teaching; it is a life yielded to Him in waiting dependence and full obedience to be made spiritual, that receives the spiritual wisdom and understanding. In the mind (rums, in the Scripture meaning of the term) these two elements, the moral and the cognitive, are united; only as the former has precedence and sway, can the latter apprehend what God has spoken.1

It is easy to understand how a carnal or fleshly life with its walk, and the fleshly mind with its knowledge, act and react on each other. As far as we are giving way to the flesh, we are incapable of receiving spiritual insight into truth. We may 'know all mysteries, and have all knowledge,' without love, the love which the Spirit works in the inner life; it is only a knowledge that puffeth up, it profiteth nothing. The carnal life makes the knowledge carnal. And this knowledge again, being thus held in the fleshly mind, strengthens the religion of the flesh, of self-trust and self-effort; the truth so received has no power to renew and make free. No wonder that there is so much Bible teaching and 1 See Note N.

Bible knowledge, with so little of real spiritual result in a life of holiness. Would God that Hi3 word might sound through His Church: 'Whereas there is among you jealousy and strife, are ye not carnal?' Unless we be living spiritual lives, full of humility, and love* and self-sacrifice, spiritual truth, the truth of God, cannot enter or profit us.

And why is it not so? The question brings us into the presence of that strange and unfathomable mystery—the power God has given men of accepting or refusing His offers, of being true or being unfaithful to the grace He has given. We have already spoken of that unfaithfulness on the part of the Church, in its defective teaching of the indwelling and the sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit in the believer, and on the part of believers in th'eir Uqwillingness to forsake all to let the Holy Spirit get entire possession, and do a perfect work in them. Let us here rather seek, once again, to gather up what Scripture teaches as to the way to become spiritual

It is the Holy Spirit who makes the spiritual man. He alone can do it. He does it most certainly where the whole man is yielded up to Him. To have the whole being pervaded, influenced, sanctified by the Holy Spirit; to have first our spirit, then the soul, with the will, the feelings, the mind, and so even the body, under His control, moved and guided by Him, this makes and marks the spiritual man.

The first step on the way to this is faith. We must seek the deep, living, absorbing conviction that there is a Holy Spirit in us; that He is the Mighty Power of God dwelling and working within; that He is the representative of Jesus, making Him present within us as our Eedeemer King, mighty to save. In the union of a holy fear and trembling at the almost tremendous glory of this truth of an Indwelling God, with the childlike joy and trust of knowing Him to be the Paraclete, the Inbringer of the Divine and irrevocable presence of God and of Christ, this thought must become the inspiration of life: The Holy Spirit has His home within us: in our Spirit is His hidden, blessed dwelling-place.

As we are filled with the faith of what He is and will do, and see that it is not done, we ask for the hindrance. We find that there is an opposing power, the flesh. From Scripture we learn how the flesh has its twofold action: from the flesh springs not only unrighteousness, but self-righteousness. Both must be confessed and surrendered to Him whom the Spirit would reveal and enthrone as Lord, pur Mighty Saviour. All that is carnal and sinful, all the works of the flesh, must be given up and cast out. But no less must all that is carnal, however religious it appears, all confidence in the flesh, all self-effort and self-struggling be rooted out. The soul, with its power, must be brought into the captivity and subjection of Jesus Christ. In deep and daily dependence on God must the Holy Spirit be accepted, waited for, and followed.

Thus walking in faith and obedience, we may count on the Holy Spirit to do a divine and most blessed work within us. 'If we live by the Spirit,' —this is the faith that is needed. And then, if we believe that God's Spirit dwells in us, 'by the Spirit let us live;' this is the obedience that is asked. In the faith of that Holy Spirit who is in us, we know that we have sufficient strength to walk by the Spirit, and yield ourselves to His mighty working, to work in us to will and to do all that is pleasing in God's sight.

Gracious God! we humbly pray Thee to teach us all to profit by the solemn lessons of this portion of Thy blessed word.

Fill us with holy fear and trembling lest, with all our knowledge of the truth of Christ aud the Spirit, we should be carnal in disposition and conduct, not walking in the love and purity of Thy Holy Spirit. May we understand that knowledge only puffetb up, unless it be under the rule of the love that buildeth up.

Give us to hear Thy call to all Thy children to be spiritual. It is Thy purpose, that even as with Thy beloved Son, their whole daily life, even in the very least things, should give evidence of being the fruit of Thy Spirit's indwelling. May we all accept the call, as from Thy love, inviting us to our highest blessedness, cosafoarmity to Thy likeness in Christ Jesus.

Strengthen our faith, Blessed Father! that we may be filled with the confidence that the Holy Spirit will do His work to make us spiritual. We desire to cease from self and doubt . We give up ourselves to Jesus our Lord to rule in us, to reveal Himself by the Spirit. We bow before Thee in the childlike faith that Thy Spirit, the Spirit of .God, does dwell in us every moment. May our souls increasingly be filled with holy awe and reverenee at His presence. And do Thou, O Father, according to the riches of Thy glory, grant that we may be mightily strengthened by Him in the inner man. Then we shall be truly spiritual. Amen

1. 'Believer I rise from the disciple stage, which sauoureth not the thing* that te of God, to the spiritual Pentecostal conditivn.'—Saphir.

2. To understand the word carnal and the life Paul condemns so strong!^ here, oomp, Horn. oil. 14, 'I am carnal, gold under sin,' and the description

of the wretched and undelivered state of which that word is the secret. To understand tht word spiritual, com p. Rom. viii. 6, 'to be spiritually-minded Is life and peave,' with the description of the life of the Spirit in the context (2-18). Gomp. also Gal. v. 15 and 16, 22 and 25, 26, and vi. 1, to see how the great mark of carnal is, want of ivve, of spiritual, the meekness and love that keeps the New Commandment.

3. When a man is first regenerated, the New Life within him is but as a little seed, in the midst of a great body of sin and flesh, with its fleshly wisdom and will, fn that little seed there is Christ and His Spirit as an Almighty Power, but as such a little, feeble thing that it is easily overlooked or distrusted. Faith knows the mighty power there is in that little seed to overcome the world, and bring the whole flesh and life into subjection. So the Spirit rules and conquers and makes to die the deeds of the body, and the man becomes truly spiritual.

4. The lesson that true spiritual insight into God's Word depends upon a spiritual life, is one of great solemnity for ail ministers and teachers of the Word. Let us pray for all the Leaders of the Chureh that they may be spiritual men. lt is not the soundness of the teaching itself, nor the earnestness of the teacher, but the power of the Spirit, making his life and thoughts and words truly spiritual, that^ as a rule, secures the blessing.

6. 'lt is one thing tfo have the Holy Spirit; it is another to have Him completely possessing us. No one can be regenerated without having Him; but there is the other side of it, when He fills our entire being, and has His wau with w.'~K&U.Y.